Virtual reality and sports seem like polar opposites. But the largest companies in Silicon Valley are trying to change that, using virtual sports platforms to drive adoption and profit in this new world.
Insight and analysis of top stories from our award winning magazine “Bloomberg Businessweek”.
John Deere boasted record profits in 2021 and finally struck a deal with striking union workers. But now it has a bigger problem: farmers are revolting against restrictions on how they repair complex equipment.
Malaysia Says Ex-Astro CEO Returned $10 Million Linked to 1MDB
Texas Regulator Appeals Decision Reversing ‘21 Blackout Costs
San Francisco Fed’s Mary Daly Skips Conference Remarks After SVB Collapse
Euro-Zone Core Inflation Set for New Record in Test of ECB Nerve
BOE Hawk Sees Turning Point as Inflation Expectations Cool
American Airlines Suspends US-Spain Flight Due to Boeing 787 Delays
Biden Reaches Moment of Truth for Electric Vehicle Tax Credits
Microsoft Threatens Data Restrictions In Rival AI Search
Apple CEO Cook Stresses Ties With China at Beijing Event
Gordon Moore, Intel Co-Founder Who Coined Chip Rule, Dies at 94
White House Urged to Intervene in West Coast Port Labor Talks
Mexico Top Court Halts AMLO’s Electoral Reform After Challenge
US Bank Deposits Decline by Most in Nearly a Year
Bank of America Trims Banking, Lending Group Amid Industry Slump
Greenland Solves the Daylight Saving Time Debate
Princeton’s Advance Through March Madness Blindsides Wall Street
GE Goes From Bottom of Barrel to High-Flier
Switzerland Is Left With Watches and Chocolate, Not Cash
Is This the End of Male Overachievers’ Love Affair With Work?
How to Keep Corporate Accounts Safe Amid Bank Collapse Jitters
What Happens When Sexting Chatbots Dump Their Human Lovers
Iranian Activists Want Tech Companies to Ban the Ayatollah
LA Support Staff Reach Tentative Pay Deal After Three-Day Strike
Anti-LGBTQ Bill Threatens Uganda’s Progress With HIV, WHO Says
Central US Grid Warns of Tornadoes, Lightning in Southern States
California Ends Some Water-Use Restrictions After Rains Ease Drought
Howard University Tackles Persistent Housing Woes With Bond Deal
Venezuela’s Electrical Blackouts Widen Gap Between Rural and Urban Areas
Air Pollution Casts a Pall Over Booming Bangladesh Megacity
Bitcoin Retreats; Justin Sun-Linked Coins Drop After SEC Charges
Circle USDC Stablecoin Redemptions Rise to About $6 Billion
Miami and New York’s Crypto CityCoins Meet Quiet Demise
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Bank of America Corp. has named Akshay Sawhney and Kevin Su as co-heads for equity capital markets in Asia Pacific, according to a memo seen by Bloomberg News.
Sawhney and Su are taking over from Anvita Arora and Tucker Highfield to oversee the business, the memo said. Arora is relocating back to the UK, while Highfield has decided to retire from the industry.